U. S. NUCLEAR WEAPONS ACCIDENTS
by Jaya Tiwari and Cleve J. Gray
Jaya Tiwari is a Ph.D. candidate at Old
Dominion University and a former intern at the Center for
Defense Information (CDI). Cleve Gray is a M.A. candidate in
National Security Studies at Georgetown University and a former
research intern at CDI.
Inadvertent Explosion:
"Nuclear weapons are designed with great
care to explode only when deliberately armed and fired.
Nevertheless, there is always a possibility that, as a
result of accidental circumstances, an explosion will take
place inadvertently. Although all conceivable precautions
are taken to prevent them, such accidents might occur in
areas where weapons are assembled and stored, during the
course of loading and transportation on the ground, or
when actually in the delivery vehicle, e.g., an airplane
or a missile."
-Atomic Energy
Commission/Department of Defense, The Effects of
Nuclear Weapons, 1962. |
"Nuclear weapons are designed with great care to explode only
when deliberately armed and fired. Nevertheless, there is always
a possibility that, as a result of accidental circumstances, an
explosion will take place inadvertently. Although all
conceivable precautions are taken to prevent them, such
accidents might occur in areas where weapons are assembled and
stored, during the course of loading and transportation on the
ground, or when actually in the delivery vehicle, e.g., an
airplane or a missile." Atomic Energy Commission/Department of
Defense, The Effects of Nuclear Weapons, 1962.
As U.S. policymakers and the media continue to
ponder the threat posed by the proliferation of nuclear
weapons into the 21st century,
questions regarding the utility of these weapons will repeatedly
surface. Moral and ethical aversions against
these weapons aside, their military utility has been questioned
by opponents of nuclear weaponry because of
their destructive capabilities and the disastrous consequences
in the rare event of an accident. The operational risks
associated with nuclear weapons jeopardize the safety and
well-being of numerous civilians as well as military
personnel.
The history of U.S. nuclear weapon accidents is as old as
their introduction into the American military arsenal. The first
known, officially acknowledged accident occurred in February
1950, when an American B-36 bomber jettisoned a bomb into the
Pacific Ocean. The record of these accidents, however, has been
beset with mysteries and inconsistencies due to a lack of
documentation available to the public. The paucity of publicly
available data is largely the result of the highly classified
nature of information regarding nuclear weapons and their
location. To maintain this opacity, the U.S. military's policy
is to neither confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear
weapons in most accidents.
Despite claims that the U.S. nuclear stockpile is safe and
reliable, the number of accidents involving America's atomic
arsenal is a matter of concern. The Department of Defense (DoD)
first published a list of nuclear weapon accidents in1968 which
detailed 13 serious nuclear weapon accidents between 1950-1968.
An updated and revised list released in 1980 catalogued 32
accidents between1950-1980. However, this second compilation
failed to include some of the accidents covered in the 1968
list.
Even the updated estimate does not tell the entire story, for
no additional list of nuclear weapon accidents acknowledged by
the Pentagon has been released since 1980. Moreover, the list
included only those instances that were judged severe enough to
fit the Pentagon's conservative definition of a nuclear weapon
"accident." Many more mishaps which could have been catastrophic
were excluded as "nuclear weapons incidents."
Further blurring the picture are major discrepancies in the
way different military branches report nuclear weapon accidents
or incidents. For example, according to a General Accounting
Office (GAO) report entitled Navy Nuclear Weapons Safeguards and
Nuclear Weapon Accident Emergency Planning, a total of 563
nuclear weapon incidents were reported by the Navy between
1965-1983. However, the report creates some uncertainty by
noting that "of the 563 nuclear weapon incidents reported, 330
involved no weapon or the weapon or component involved were
non-nuclear." The report does not provide any explanation of
this discrepancy although a number of plausible explanations
exist. For instance, the Navy could have included 330 security
breaches in its overall total. Nevertheless, even if these 330
incidents are not considered "accidents," 233 nuclear weapons
incidents are publically documented during the 18 year period
covered by this report. At the same time, documents released by
the Navy under the Freedom of Information Act cite 381 nuclear
weapon incidents between 1965 and 1977.
While studies by non-governmental organizations such as
Greenpeace often cite many more accidents, even DoD's
conservative estimates document that at least one serious
nuclear weapon accident occurred every year. This should give
pause to any policymaker considering the future utility of
nuclear arsenals.
Listed below are accidents involving U.S. nuclear weapons.
Although the list is far from complete, it includes all
accidents that can be verifiably documented and corroborated
from more than one source. Accidents which have not been
acknowledged or verified from government sources are marked by
an asterisk (*) and the source(s) of information provided. This
list includes nuclear weapon accidents involving the Air Force,
Navy and the Department of Energy (DoE). There is no public
information available about nuclear weapon accidents involving
the Army.
U.S. Navy's Definition of Nuclear Weapon
Accident
Nucflash
- Any accidental or unauthorized incident involving a
possible detonation of a nuclear weapon by U.S. Forces which
could create the risk of nuclear war between the U.S. and the
U.S.S.R.
Broken Arrow
- The accidental or unauthorized detonation, or possible
detonation of a nuclear weapon (other than war risk);
- Non-nuclear detonation or burning of a nuclear weapon;
- Radioactive contamination;
- Seizure, theft, or loss of a nuclear weapon or component
(including jettisoning);
- Public hazard, actual or implied.
Bent Spear
- Any nuclear weapon significant incidents other than
nuclear weapons accidents or war risk detonations, actual or
possible.
Dull Sword
- Any nuclear weapon incident other than significant
incidents.
Faded Giant
- Any nuclear reactor or radiological accidents involving
equipment used in connection with naval nuclear reactors or
other naval nuclear energy devices while such equipment is
under the custody of the Navy.
DoD's Definition of Nuclear Weapon
Accident
An unexpected event involving nuclear
weapons or nuclear weapons components that results in any of the
following:
- Accidental or unauthorized launching, firing, or use, by
U.S. forces or supported allied forces, of a nuclear-capable
weapon system which could create the risk of an outbreak of
war;
- Nuclear detonation, non-nuclear detonation or burning of a
nuclear weapon or radioactive weapon component, including a
fully assembled nuclear weapon, an unassembled nuclear weapon,
or radioactive nuclear weapon components;
- Radioactive contamination;
- Seizure, theft, or loss of a nuclear weapon component,
including jettisoning;
- Public hazard, actual or implied.
DoD's Definition of Nuclear Weapons
Incident
An unexpected event involving a nuclear weapon, facility, or
component, resulting in any of the following, but not
constituting a nuclear weapons accident:
- an increase in possibility of explosion or radioactive
contamination;
- errors committed in the assembly, testing, loading or
transportation of equipment, and or the malfunctioning of
equipment and material which could lead to an unintentional
operation of all or part of the weapon arming and/or firing
sequence, or which could lead to a substantial change in
yield, or increased dud probability;
- any act of God, unfavorable environment, or conditions
resulting in damage to the weapon, facility or component.
Triggering a Nuclear Exchange
"The explosion of a nuclear device by accident--mechanical or
human--could be a disaster for the United States, for its
allies, and for its enemies. If one of these devices
accidentally exploded, I would hope that both sides had
sufficient means of verification and control to prevent the
accident from triggering a nuclear exchange. But we cannot be
certain that this would be the case."
- John T. McNaughton, Assistant Secretary of Defense,
1962
EXPLOSION, BURNING OR OTHER SPREAD OF FISSILE
MATERIAL
(in chronological order)
August 5, 1950, Suisun Air Force Base, Fairfield,
California
A B-29 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon without its fissile
core crashed and burned near a trailer park occupied by 200
families. The crew experienced difficulty with the aircraft's
propellers and with retracting its landing gear immediately
after takeoff from Fairfield-Suisun Air Force Base (now Travis
Air Force Base), eventually crashing while attempting an
emergency landing.
The bomber was carrying 10-12 500 lb. conventional explosive
bombs, which detonated 15 minutes after the crash. The ensuing
blast was felt as far as 30 miles away and created a crater 20
yards across and six feet deep. The crash and subsequent
detonation killed eighteen personnel, including Air Force
General Travis, and injured 60 others.
May 22, 1957, Kirtland Air Force Base, New
Mexico
A nuclear weapon without its fissile core fell from the bomb
bay of a B-36 at an altitude of 1,700 feet and exploded upon
impact. The bomber was transporting both the weapon and its
fissile core, which had been removed for safety, from Biggs Air
Force Base in Texas to Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico.
Although parachutes attached to the weapon were deployed during
its descent, they did not function properly.
The nuclear weapon was completely destroyed in the detonation
which occurred approximately 4.5 miles south of the Kirtland
control tower and 0.3 miles west of the Sandia Base reservation,
creating a blast crater approximately 25 feet in diameter and 12
feet deep. Fragments of the bomb and debris were scattered over
a one mile area. A radiological survey of the area was
conducted, but revealed no radioactive contamination beyond the
lip of the crater.
January 31, 1958, Unidentified Overseas
Base
A B-47 bomber with one nuclear weapon in strike configuration
was making a simulated takeoff during an exercise when the left
rear wheel casting failed, causing the tail to strike the runway
and rupturing the fuel tank. The aircraft caught fire and burned
for seven hours. Although the weapon's high explosives did not
detonate, there was some contamination in the area immediately
surrounding the crash. Following the accident, exercise alerts
were temporarily suspended.
The crash may have taken place at a U.S. airbase in Sidi
Slimane, French Morocco. An earlier Air Force document reported
that "contamination of the wreckage was high, but that of the
surrounding area was low." A June 8, 1960, New York
Times report mentions a nuclear weapon accident having
occurred "at a United States field near Tripoli, Libya," but
provides no further details.
*February 1958, Greenham Common Airbase,
England
A B-47 bomber experiencing engine trouble during takeoff
jettisoned two full 1,700 gallon fuel tanks from an altitude of
8,000 feet, which missed a designated safe impact area and
exploded 65 feet behind a parked B-47 loaded with nuclear
weapons. The resulting fire burned for 16 hours and caused the
high explosives package of at least one weapon to explode. The
explosion released radioactive material, including powdered
uranium and plutonium oxides, at least 10 to 20 grams of which
were found off base. An adjacent hangar was also severely
damaged, and other planes nearby had to be hosed down to prevent
their ignition by the intense heat fueled by the jet propellant
and magnesium in the B-47. The fire killed two people, injured
eight others, and destroyed the bomber.
The Air Force has never officially admitted that nuclear
weapons were involved in this accident. The Air Force and
British Ministry of Defence agreed in 1956 to deny the existence
of nuclear weapons in any accident involving U.S. nuclear
weapons stationed in England. In 1985, the British government
reported that the accident involved a parked B-47 that was
struck by a taxiing B-47 on a training exercise, omitting any
mention of the ensuing fire.
"Activists Claim Proof of Nuclear Accident," San
Francisco Examiner, July 15, 1996, p. A-11; Shaun Gregory,
The Hidden Cost of Deterrence: Nuclear Weapons
Accidents, Brassey's UK, London, 1990, p.152; From a report
on Greenham Common Accident, "Broken Arrow," Center for Nuclear
Disarmament, London, England, July 1996, http:///
November 26, 1958, Chennault Air Force Base, Lake
Charles, Louisiana
A B-47 bomber caught fire on the ground, destroying the
single nuclear weapon onboard. Contamination was limited to the
immediate vicinity of the aircraft wreckage.
July 6, 1959, Barksdale Air Force Base, Bossier City,
Louisiana
A C-124 aircraft transporting a nuclear weapon without its
fissile core crashed during takeoff, completely destroying the
aircraft and nuclear weapon. There was a limited amount of
contamination immediately below the destroyed weapon, but not
enough to hamper rescue or firefighting operations.
June 7, 1960, McGuire Air Force Base, near Trenton,
New Jersey
A BOMARC* air defense missile being stored in a ready state
that permitted its launch in two minutes was destroyed after a
high pressure helium tank exploded and ruptured the missile's
fuel tanks. Although the warhead was also destroyed by the fire,
the safety devices acted properly and prevented the weapon's
high explosives from detonating. A New York Times
article described a near nuclear disaster, noting that the
missile "melted under an intense blaze fed by its 100-pound
detonator TNT...The atomic warhead apparently dropped into the
molten mass that was left of the missile, which burned for
forty-five minutes." The ensuing radiation "had been caused when
thoriated magnesium metal which forms part of the weapon, caught
fire." The Pentagon report said that only the area immediately
beneath the weapon and an adjacent elongated area approximately
100 feet long were contaminated by water runoff from fighting
the fire.
* "BO" for Boeing and "MARC" for Michigan Aeronautical
Research Center.
November 13, 1963, Atomic Energy Commission Storage
Igloo, Medina Base, San Antonio, Texas
While three employees were dismantling the high explosive
(HE) components of a nuclear bomb, they began burning
spontaneously, triggering a large blast involving 120 pounds of
HE. The explosion caused little contamination.
New York University's Dr. Joel Larus, who investigated the
incident, was provided details of three similar incidents by the
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) on January 13, 1966. They are as
follows:
Hamburg, New York (January 4, 1958)...An
eastbound Nickel Plate railroad freight train derailed. Five
cars carrying "AEC classified material" were involved in the
accident. According to the report there was no damage to the
material and no injury to AEC personnel escorting the
shipment.
Winslow, Arizona (November 4, 1961)...A trailer
truck caught fire while carrying a small amount of radioactive
material. There was no contamination resulting from the
fire.
Marietta, Georgia (December 2, 1962)...A
Louisville and Nashville train derailed while carrying nuclear
weapons components. The material was not damaged, but three
couriers were injured.
As these accounts demonstrate, accidents of this nature
probably happen more frequently than reported. For instance, a
Department of Energy trailer carrying plutonium from Richland,
Washington, to New Mexico overturned on icy roads on Interstate
25 near Fort Collins, Colorado, in December 1980.
December 8, 1964, Bunker Hill (now Grissom) Air Force
Base, Peru, Indiana
A B-58 bomber lost control and slid off a runway during taxi,
causing portions of the five nuclear weapons onboard to burn in
an ensuing fire. There were no detonations and contamination was
limited to the immediate area of the crash.
October 11, 1965, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base,
near Dayton, Ohio
A C-124 transport aircraft containing nuclear weapons
components and a dummy training unit caught fire while being
refueled. The fire started at the aft end of the refueling
trailer and destroyed the aircraft's fuselage. There were no
casualties and the resultant radiation hazard was
minimal.
January 17, 1966, Palomares, Spain
A B-52 bomber carrying four hydrogen bombs collided in midair
with a KC-135 tanker near Palomares, Spain. Of the four H-bombs
aboard, two weapons' high explosive material exploded on ground
impact, releasing radioactive materials, including plutonium,
over the fields of Palomares. Approximately 1,400 tons of
slightly contaminated soil and vegetation were later taken to
the United States for storage at an approved site. A third
nuclear weapon fell to earth but remained relatively intact; the
last one fell into the ocean.
The weapon that sank in the Mediterranean set off one of the
largest search and recovery operations in history. The search
took about eighty days and employed 3,000 Navy personnel and 33
Navy vessels, not including ships, planes, and people used to
move equipment to the site. Although the midget sub "Alvin"
located the bomb after two weeks, it was not recovered until
April 7. Wreckage from the accident fell across approximately
100 square miles of land and water.
The accident occurred during a routine high altitude air
refueling operation as the B-52 was returning to Seymour Johnson
Air Force Base in Goldsboro, North Carolina, after flying the
southern route of the Strategic Air Command air alert mission
code named "Chrome Dome." The bomber was attempting its third
refueling with a KC-135 tanker from the American base at Moron,
when the nozzle of the tanker's boom struck the bomber. The boom
ripped open the B-52 along its spine, snapping the bomber into
pieces. The KC-135's 40,000 gallons of jet fuel ignited, killing
seven crewmen.
January 21, 1968, Thule, Greenland
Four nuclear bombs were destroyed in a fire after the B-52
bomber carrying them crashed approximately seven miles southwest
of the runway at Thule Air Force Base in Greenland. The B-52,
from Plattsburgh Air Force Base in New York, crashed after a
fire broke out in the navigator's compartment. The pilot was en
route to Thule AFB to attempt an emergency landing. Upon impact
with the ground, the plane burst into flames, igniting the high
explosive outer coverings of at least one of the bombs. The
explosive then detonated, scattering plutonium and other
radioactive materials over an area about 300 yards on either
side of the plane's path, much of it in "cigarette box-sized"
pieces.
The bomber had been flying the Arctic Circle route as part of
the Strategic Air Command's continuous airborne alert operation,
code-name "Chrome Dome." One crew member was killed in the
crash.
The government of Denmark, which owns Greenland and prohibits
nuclear weapons on or over its territory, issued a strong
protest following large demonstrations in that country. A few
days after the crash, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara
ordered the removal of nuclear weapons from airborne alert. The
alerts themselves were later curtailed and then suspended
altogether.
September 19, 1980, Damascus, Arkansas
Fuel vapors from a Titan II intercontinental ballistic
missile (ICBM) exploded in the missile's silo, blowing off the
740-ton silo door of reinforced concrete and steel and
catapulting the missile's nuclear warhead 600 feet. The accident
occurred when an Air Force repairman dropped a heavy wrench
socket that struck the missile, causing a leak in the missile's
pressurized fuel tank. The fuel caught fire and exploded
approximately 8 ½ hours later, killing one person and injuring
twenty-one others. The missile's reentry vehicle, which
contained a nuclear warhead, was recovered intact.
WEAPONS
LOST/MISSING
March 10, 1956, Over the Mediterranean
Sea
A B-47 bomber carrying two nuclear weapon cores in their
carrying cases disappeared over the Mediterranean Sea. The
aircraft, on a nonstop flight from MacDill Air Force Base in
Tampa, Florida, to an undisclosed overseas airbase, was lost
with its crew. After takeoff the B-47 was scheduled for two
in-flight-refuelings before reaching its final destination. The
first refueling was successfully completed, but the aircraft
never made contact with the second refueling tanker over the
Mediterranean Sea. Despite an extensive search, no trace of the
aircraft, the nuclear weapon cores, or crew, were ever
found.
July 28, 1957, Over the Atlantic Ocean
A C-124 transport aircraft that was having mechanical
problems jettisoned two nuclear weapons without their fissile
cores off the east coast of the United States. The C-124 was en
route from Dover Air Force Base in Delaware when it lost power
to its number one and two engines. The crew determined that
level flight could not be maintained with the weight of the
weapons onboard and decided to jettison the cargo. Although
neither weapon detonated, both are presumed to have been damaged
from impact with the ocean surface and to have sunk almost
instantly. Neither the weapons nor debris were ever found. The
C-124 safely landed at an airfield near Atlantic City, New
Jersey, with the remaining weapon and nuclear warhead
aboard.
February 5, 1958, Savannah River,
Georgia
A nuclear weapon without a fissile core was lost following a
mid-air collision. A B-47 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon
without its fissile core collided with a F-86 aircraft near
Savannah, Georgia. Following three unsuccessful attempts to land
the plane at Hunter Air Force Base in Georgia, the weapon was
jettisoned to avoid the risk of a high explosive detonation at
the base. The weapon was jettisoned into the water several miles
from the mouth of Savannah River in Wassaw Sound off Tybee
Beach, but the precise point of impact is unknown. The weapon's
high explosives did not detonate on impact. A subsequent search
covering three square miles used divers and sonar devices, but
failed to find the weapon. The search was ended on April 16,
1958, and the weapon was considered to be irretrievably
lost.
Some accounts of nuclear weapon accidents list a February 12,
1958, accident involving a B-47 near Savannah, Georgia. "The
best estimate" of the weapon's location, an earlier DoD
narrative noted, "was determined to be 31 degrees 54' 15" North,
80 degrees 54' 45" West." The B-47 was on a simulated combat
mission from Florida's Homestead Air Force Base.
September 25, 1959, Off Whidbey Island,
Washington
A U.S. Navy P-5M aircraft carrying an unarmed nuclear depth
charge without its fissile core crashed into Puget Sound near
Whidbey Island, Washington. The weapon was never
recovered.
January 24, 1961, Goldsboro, North
Carolina
In what nearly became a nuclear catastrophe, a B-52 bomber on
airborne alert carrying two nuclear weapons broke apart in
midair. The B-52 experienced structural failure in its right
wing and the aircraft's resulting breakup released the two
weapons from a height of 2,000-10,000 feet. One of the bomb's
parachutes deployed properly and that weapon's damage was
minimal. However, the second bomb's parachute malfunctioned and
the weapon broke apart upon impact, scattering its components
over a wide area. According to Daniel Ellsberg, the weapon could
have accidentally fired because "five of the six safety devices
had failed." Nuclear physicist Ralph E. Lapp supported this
assertion, saying that "only a single switch" had "prevented the
bomb from detonating and spreading fire and destruction over a
wide area."
Despite an extensive search of the waterlogged farmland where
the weapon was believed to have landed, the bomb's highly
enriched uranium core was never recovered. In order to prevent
any discovery of the lost portion of the weapon, the Air Force
purchased an easement which required that permission be obtained
before any construction or digging could begin in the area.
Three crew members were killed in the crash.
The accident was apparently so serious that it was reported
to newly-elected President John F. Kennedy. According to
Newsweek, President Kennedy was informed after the
accident that "there had been more than 60 accidents involving
nuclear weapons" since World War II, "including two cases in
which nuclear-tipped anti-aircraft missiles were actually
launched by inadvertence." As a result of the Goldsboro
accident, the U.S. placed many new safety devices on its nuclear
arsenal and the Soviet Union was encouraged to do the
same.
December 5, 1965, Aboard the USS Ticonderoga
(CVA-14) in the Pacific Ocean
An A-4E Skyhawk strike aircraft carrying a nuclear weapon
rolled off an elevator on the U.S. aircraft carrier
Ticonderoga and fell into the sea. Because the bomb was
lost at a depth of approximately 16,000 feet, Pentagon officials
feared that intense water pressure could have caused the B-43
hydrogen bomb to explode. It is still unknown whether an
explosion did occur. The pilot, aircraft, and weapon were
lost.
The Pentagon claimed that the bomb was lost "500 miles away
from land." However, it was later revealed that the aircraft and
nuclear weapon sank only miles from the Japanese island chain of
Ryukyu. Several factors contributed to the Pentagon's
secretiveness. The USS Ticonderoga was returning from a
mission off North Vietnam; confirming that the carrier had
nuclear weapons aboard would document their introduction into
the Vietnam War. Furthermore, Japan's anti-nuclear law
prohibited the introduction of atomic weapons into its
territory, and U.S. military bases in Japan are not exempt from
this law. Thus, confirming that the USS Ticonderoga
carried nuclear weapons would signify U.S. violation of its
military agreements with Japan. The carrier was headed to
Yokosuka, Japan, and disclosure of the accident in the mid-1980s
caused a strain in U.S.-Japanese relations.
Spring 1968, Aboard the USS Scorpion
(SSN-589) in the Atlantic Ocean
Although the Pentagon has not publicly released details of
the accident, it probably refers to the nuclear powered attack
submarine USS Scorpion that was lost at sea.
The sub, carrying unidentified nuclear weapons, was last heard
from on May 21, 1968, while returning to Norfolk, Virginia,
after a three month training exercise in the Mediterranean Sea.
The USS Scorpion sank 400-500 miles southwest of the
Azores.
The U.S. initially suspected that the Soviet Union was
somehow involved. The suspicions were allayed when the research
ship Mizar (T-AK-272) photographed the wreckage lying
on the sea floor at 10,000 feet. A Navy court of inquiry found
"no evidence of any kind to suggest foul play or sabotage," and
found that the "certain cause of the loss of the
Scorpion cannot be ascertained from evidence now
available."
FALSE
WARNING OF NUCLEAR LAUNCH AGAINST THE U.S.
October, 5, 1960,
Thule, Greenland
"We have highly trained and experienced
personnel in charge of all phases of the warning process,
and there is no chance that any irreversible actions would
be taken based on ambiguous computer information."
-Annual Report to the Congress for Fiscal Year
1982, Department of Defense, p. 121
|
An early-warning system radar malfunction falsely warned the
North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) headquarters of
a "massive" Soviet ballistic missile strike approaching the
United States. A fault in the computer system had removed two
zeros from the radar's ranging components, causing the radar to
detect what it believed was a possible missile attack at 2,500
miles. The radar was actually detecting a reflection from the
moon, located 250,000 miles away.
Shaun Gregory, The Hidden Cost of Deterrence: Nuclear
Weapons Accidents, Brassey's UK, London, 1990, p.
156.
October 25, 1962, Volk Field Base,
Wisconsin
An alarm bell indicating that a nuclear war with the Soviet
Union was beginning went off accidentally during the height of
the Cuban missile crisis. Pilots ran to their nuclear-armed
aircraft and were ready to take off when the mistake was
detected by an officer in the command post. The pilots were
ordered to return.
Scott D. Sagan, The Limits of Safety: Organizations,
Accidents, and Nuclear Weapons, Princeton University Press,
Princeton, New Jersey, 1993, p. 3.
June 3 and 6, 1980, Unknown
Location
An alarm indicating a massive Soviet missile attack was
registered by a communications computer connected to NORAD. A
threat assessment conference was called, and 100 nuclear-armed
B-52s were put on alert for imminent takeoff. Although the
mistake was detected, the same computer produced an identical
warning three days later on June 6, 1980. A threat assessment
conference was again called and 100 nuclear-armed B-52s were put
on alert for takeoff. The problem was later traced to the
failure of an integrated circuit in a computer, which was
producing random digits representing the number of missiles
detected.
Shaun Gregory, The Hidden Cost of Deterrence: Nuclear
Weapons Accidents, Brassey's UK, London, 1990, p.
178.
January 10, 1984, Warren AFB, Cheyenne, Wyoming
Warren Air Force Base in Cheyenne, Wyoming, recorded a
message that one of its Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic
missiles was about to launch from its silo due to a computer
malfunction. To prevent the possible launch, an armored
car was parked on top of the silo.
Shaun Gregory, The Hidden Cost of Deterrence: Nuclear
Weapons Accidents, Brassey's UK, London, 1990, pp.
181-182.
ACCIDENTS RESULTING IN
FATALITIES NOT INVOLVING FISSILE MATERIAL
July 13, 1950, Lebanon, Ohio
A B-50 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon without its fissile
core crashed while on a training mission from Biggs Air Force
Base near El Paso, Texas. Mechanical difficulties caused the
bomber to nosedive from a height of 7,000 feet and crash. The
weapon's high explosives detonated upon impact, causing an
explosion felt well over 25 miles away and creating a crater 25
feet deep and 200 feet square. Four officers and twelve airmen
were killed in the accident.
April 11, 1950, Manzano Base,
Albuquerque, New Mexico
A B-29 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon, four spare
detonators, and a crew of thirteen crashed into a mountain near
Manzano Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The crash occurred
within three minutes of departure from the Kirtland Air Force
Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and resulted in a major fire
which was reported by the New York Times as being
visible from "fifteen miles." The bomb's casing was completely
demolished and its high explosives ignited upon contact with the
plane's burning fuel. However, according to the DoD, the four
spare detonators and all nuclear components were recovered. A
nuclear detonation was not possible because the weapon's core,
while being carried on-board, was not placed in the weapon for
safety reasons. All thirteen crew members were killed.
July 27, 1956, Lakenheath Royal Air Force Station,
England
A B-47 bomber crashed into a storage igloo containing three
MK-6 nuclear weapons while on a routine training mission at the
Lakenheath Royal Air Force Station, 20 miles northeast of
Cambridge, England. Although the bombs involved in the accident
did not have their fissile cores installed, each of them carried
about 8,000 pounds of high explosives as part of their trigger
mechanism. The crash and ensuing fire did not ignite the high
explosives and no detonation occurred. A retired Air Force
general who was in England said later that if the weapons' high
explosives had detonated, releasing radioactive material, "it is
possible that a part of Eastern England would have become a
desert." Another Air Force officer present at the scene said
that it was only through "a combination of tremendous heroism,
good fortune and the will of God" that a horrific nuclear
weapons accident was avoided. The damaged weapons and components
were later returned to the Atomic Energy Commission. The B-47
involved in the accident, which killed four crewmen, was part of
the 307th Bombardment Wing.
November 4, 1958, Dyess Air Force Base, Abilene,
Texas
A B-47 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon caught fire during
takeoff and crashed from an altitude of 1,500 feet, killing one
crew member. The resulting detonation of high explosives created
a crater 35 feet in diameter and six feet deep. Nuclear
materials from the weapon were recovered near the crash
site.
October 15, 1959, Hardinsberg, Kentucky
A B-52 bomber carrying two atomic bombs collided at 32,000
feet with a KC-135 refueling aircraft shortly after initiating
refueling procedures near Hardinsberg, Kentucky. The ensuing
crash killed 8 crew members and partially burned one of the
weapons. No nuclear material was released, however, and the
unarmed weapons were recovered intact. Both planes had departed
from Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi.
*January 19, 1961, Monticello, Utah
A B-52 bomber carrying one or more nuclear weapons was
reported to have exploded in midair about 10 miles north of
Monticello, Utah. The bomber had left Biggs AFB near El Paso,
Texas, bound for Bismarck, North Dakota, on a routine
"round-robin" training mission. Near Monticello the aircraft
began climbing from 36,000 to 40,000 feet and soon experienced a
violent bump followed by a descending right roll of about 410
degrees, a short period of wings-level, nose-down flight, and
then a violent spin. The aircraft descended rapidly and at an
elevation of 7,000 feet broke into several pieces that landed
within an area two miles wide by 11 ½ miles long. Observers on
the ground said the plane's left-wing engine caught fire, after
which there was a midair explosion. Five crewmen were killed in
the accident.
"Report of AF Aircraft Accident," January 19, 1961; "Missing
Airman Found Dead," The San Juan Record, Monticello,
Utah, January 27, 1961. Cited in Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3:
Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1981, p. 34.
HIGH EXPLOSIVE DETONATION WITH NO SPREAD OF
FISSILE MATERIAL
February 13, 1950, off the Coast of British
Columbia
An American B-36 bomber was forced to jettison a weapon which
exploded on impact. The bomber, carrying one weapon containing a
dummy warhead, was flying a simulated combat mission from Eilson
Air Force Base, near Fairbanks, Alaska, to Carswell Air Force
Base in Fort Worth, Texas. After six hours of flight the bomber
experienced mechanical problems and was forced to shut down
three of its engines at an altitude of 12,000 feet. Fearing that
severe weather and icing would jeopardize a safe emergency
landing, the weapon was jettisoned over the Pacific Ocean from a
height of 8,000 feet. The weapon's high explosives exploded upon
impact. All sixteen crew members and one passenger were able to
parachute to safety and were subsequently rescued from Princess
Royal Island.
The Pentagon's summary report does not mention if the weapon
was later recovered.
November 10, 1950, St. Lawrence River, St.
Alexandre-de-Kamouraska, Canada
A B-50 bomber was forced to jettison a nuclear weapon
containing high explosives (HE) but no nuclear material, causing
the HE to detonate on impact. The bomb exploded near the middle
of the 12 mile wide St. Lawrence River, rattling the windows of
houses across a 25 mile area.
The accident occurred not long after takeoff when the
aircraft lost power in two of its engines during a training
flight as it was returning from Labrador, Canada, to its home
base at Davis-Monthan AFB in Tucson, Arizona. Although the
Pentagon's 1980 summary of nuclear accidents did not
specifically mention the accident's location other than to say
they were "over water, outside the United States," news reports
and eyewitness accounts identified the location as being over
the St. Lawrence River near St. Alexandre-de-Kamouraska, Canada.
The DoD documents do not mention whether the weapon was
recovered.
October 11, 1957, Homestead Air Force Base,
Homestead, Florida
A B-47 bomber carrying a nuclear weapon and its separated
fissile core crashed shortly after takeoff. The aircraft crashed
in an inhabited area approximately 3,800 feet from the end of
the runway, enveloping the nuclear weapon and its fissile core
in flames which burned and smoldered for approximately four
hours. Although two small explosions occurred during the
burning, the weapon core and its carrying case were recovered
intact and only slightly damaged by the heat. Approximately
one-half of the weapon remained and all its major components
were recovered but damaged.
March 11, 1958, Florence, South
Carolina
A B-47E accidentally jettisoned an unarmed nuclear weapon
without its fissile core at 15,000 feet, which impacted in a
sparsely populated area 6-1/2 miles east of Florence, South
Carolina. The bomb's high explosive material exploded on impact,
causing property damage and several injuries. The aircraft,
which was heading to an undisclosed overseas base, returned to
Hunter Air Force Base in Georgia without further
incident.
Numerous accounts of the accident describe the bomb falling
in the garden of Mr. Walter Gregg in Mars Bluff, South Carolina.
The high explosive detonation virtually destroyed his house,
creating a crater 50-70 feet in diameter and 25-30 feet deep. It
caused minor injuries to Mr. Gregg and five members of his
family, and damaged five other houses as well as a church.
Following the accident, Air Force crews were ordered to "lock
in" their nuclear bombs, which reduced the possibility of
accidental drops but increased the danger during a plane
crash.
OTHER MINOR INCIDENTS INVOLVING NUCLEAR
MATERIALS
*January 9, 1956, Kirtland Air Force Base, New
Mexico
An incident involving a B-36 bomber carrying one or more
nuclear weapons occurred on January 9, 1956, at Kirtland AFB in
New Mexico, according to a February 1991 report by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The report, however,
provides no further details on the type of weapon involved or of
any damage to the weapons onboard.
"Crash Site May Be Radioactive," San Jose Mercury
News, April 9, 1992. Cited in Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3:
Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1981," p. 9.
*February 1958, Aircraft Unknown, Location
Unknown
An unidentified aircraft crashed "on base" while carrying a
MK-7 training weapon in February, 1958. Aircraft wreckage and
weapons parts were scattered over an area approximately 250 feet
wide by 0.25 miles long. The largest piece of weapon recovered
was located with part of the plane's tail section.
OOMA Airmunitions Letter 136-11-56A, Summary of Nuclear
Weapons Incidents (AF Form 1058) and Related Problems, Calendar
Year 1958, Headquarters Ogden Air Materiel Area, USAF, Hill AFB,
Utah, 23 June 1960, p. 2. Cited in Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3:
Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1981," p.18.
January 18, 1959, Unspecified Pacific
Base
A grounded F-100 interceptor carrying a nuclear weapon
without its fissile core burst into flames when its external
fuel tanks were inadvertently jettisoned during a practice
alert. The plane was carrying a payload of one nuclear weapon
and three external fuel tanks. The fire was doused in about
seven minutes and there were no contamination or cleanup
problems.
*August 18, 1959, Aboard the Aircraft Carrier USS
Wasp (CVS-18)
A severe fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Wasp
threatened to engulf the nuclear weapons storage space and
required flooding of the forward ammunition stores. Foam was
pumped through the flight deck, and the crew prepared to flood
the nuclear weapons storage spaces. The fire was brought under
control before that command was given.
William Arkin and Joshua Handler, Naval Nuclear
Accidents: The Secret History, Greenpeace, Vol. 14, #4,
July/August 1989, p. 17.
*January 16, 1961, Undisclosed U.S. Air Force Base,
Britain
A nuclear bomber on round-the-clock alert crashed on takeoff
causing spilled fuel to erupt into flames which engulfed the
aircraft at an undisclosed USAF base in Britain. A nuclear
weapon mounted on the aircraft's centerline pylon was badly
damaged before the fire could be put out. According to secret
correspondence to the Chairman of the U.S. Joint Commission on
Atomic Energy (JCAE), the accident was so serious that the
weapon was "scorched and blistered." The U.S. Government has
never acknowledged the accident and it is not included on the
DoD's list of broken arrows.
January 23, 1961, letter from Herbert B. Loper, Assistant to
the Secretary of Defense (Atomic Energy) to Honorable Clinton P.
Anderson, Chairman, JCAE. Cited in Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3:
Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1981," p. 31; Eddie
Goncalves, "Broken Arrow," Center for Nuclear Disarmament, http://www.cnduk.org./
March 14, 1961, Yuba City,
California
A B-52 bomber carrying two nuclear weapons crashed, tearing
the weapons from the aircraft on impact. The weapons' high
explosive did not detonate and their safety devices worked
properly. The aircraft had departed from Mather Air Force Base
near Sacramento and was forced to descend to 10,000 feet after
the crew compartment pressurization system failed. Flying at the
lower altitude increased the plane's fuel consumption, causing
it to run out of fuel prior to its scheduled rendezvous with a
tanker.
*June 4, 1962, Pacific Ocean Near Johnston
Atoll
A nuclear test device atop a Thor rocket booster fell into
the Pacific Ocean near Johnston Atoll after the booster
malfunctioned and was destroyed minutes after liftoff. The test
was the United States' first attempt at conducting a
high-altitude atmospheric nuclear test.
William Arkin and Joshua Handler, Naval Nuclear
Accidents: The Secret History, Greenpeace, Vol. 14, #4,
July/August 1989, p. 16; Joshua Handler, Amy Wickenheiser and
William Arkin, Naval Safety 1989: The Year Of The
Accident, Greenpeace, Neptune Papers, # 4, April 1990, p.
25.
*June 20, 1962, Thor Rocket, Pacific
Island
A second attempt to detonate a nuclear device in the high
atmosphere failed when a Thor booster malfunctioned over
Johnston Atoll. The nuclear device fell into the Pacific
Ocean.
William Arkin and Joshua Handler, Naval Nuclear
Accidents: The Secret History, Greenpeace, Vol. 14, #4,
July/August 1989, p. 16; Joshua Handler, Amy Wickenheiser and
William Arkin, Naval Safety 1989: The Year Of The
Accident, Greenpeace, Neptune Papers, # 4, April 1990, p.
25.
January 13, 1964, Cumberland, Maryland
A B-52D bomber carrying two nuclear weapons crashed
approximately 17 miles southwest of Cumberland, Maryland. The
nuclear weapons were being transported in a tactical ferry
configuration, meaning that no mechanical or electrical
connections had been made from the bombs to the aircraft. The
bomber was en route from Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee
Falls, Massachusetts, to its home base at Turner Air Force Base
in Albany, Georgia, when it encountered violent turbulence.
During an altitude change from 29,500 to 33,000 feet, the
aircraft encountered more violent air turbulence and suffered
structural failure. Both weapons were recovered relatively
intact.
December 5, 1964, Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid
City, South Dakota
A retrorocket located below an LGM 30B Minuteman I missile's
Reentry Vehicle (RV) fired while two repairmen were working
nearby, sending the reentry vehicle crashing down to the bottom
of its silo. The arming and fusing/altitude control subsystem
containing the RV's batteries were torn loose on impact,
removing all sources of power from the RV and causing it
considerable damage. The missile's safety devices operated
properly and did not allow the warhead to become armed. The
Minuteman I was on strategic alert.
January 19, 1966, Aboard the USS Luce
(DLG-7)
A W-45 nuclear warhead separated from a Trier surface-to-air
missile and fell 8 feet while it was being loading on the
frigate USS Luce. The warhead was dented but otherwise
unharmed. The incident was first documented in the "Chronology
of Nuclear Accident Statements" released by the Department of
Defense in 1968.
*February 22, 1970, Boetingen, West Germany
A nuclear warhead from a Pershing ballistic missile fell to
the pavement during maintenance procedures. The launch pad was
evacuated and the area sealed off. The warhead, however, did not
detonate.
The incident occurred when a crewman, working alone in
violation of regulations that require at least two persons to be
present around nuclear weapons, accidentally removed an
explosive bolt and its detonating cable, causing the warhead to
fall. The fall broke off approximately a one-half inch piece of
the missile's nosecone and also put a two inch gouge in the
nosecone and badly scratched the warhead's ablative material.
The incident was originally reported as a "Broken Arrow," but
was later downgraded to a "Bent Spear" incident.
Nine teletypes dated February 22, 23 and 27, and March 10,
1970, to Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Army in Europe, Heidelberg,
Germany. Cited in Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3: Typical U.S.
Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1980," p. 59.
*November 10, 1970, USS Canopus
(AS-34)
A fire broke out in the stern of the U.S. Navy submarine
tender USS Canopus which was carrying several
nuclear-armed missiles. The tender was at the Holy Loch
submarine base in Scotland moored alongside two American
nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines. It took four hours
to bring the fire under control.
"Selected Accidents Involving Nuclear Weapons -1950-1993,"
Greenpeace, http://www.greenpeace.org./
*February 14, 1974, Plattsburgh AFB, New
York
The nose landing gear of a USAF FB-111 carrying two short
range attack air-to-surface missiles and two nuclear bombs
collapsed as the aircraft was commencing an engine run-up during
an alert exercise. There was no damage to the weapons and they
were unloaded without incident.
February 15, 1974, letter from Brig. Gen. James R. Brickel,
USAF, Deputy Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Atomic
Energy, to Edward J. Bauser, Executive Director, JCAE. Cited in
Chuck Hansen, "Appendix 3: Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon
Accidents: 1950-1980," p. 59.
*October 23, 1975, Yucca Flats, Nevada
A canister containing a nuclear weapon's fissile core fell 40
feet to the bottom of a shaft during preparations for an
underground nuclear test at the Nevada Test Site. The warhead
had a yield of less than 20 kilotons. Although the warhead did
not detonate and there was no leakage of radioactive material,
11 Nevada Test Site workers were injured. The device was to be
detonated as part of a series of underground tests code-named
"Peninsula."
The incident was verified by U.S. Energy Research and
Development Administration (ERDA) spokesman, David Miller.
According to the ERDA, safety mechanisms built into the warhead
precluded the possibility that the device could have
accidentally detonated.
The Washington Star, October 30, 1975, p. 2
(31).
*November 22, 1975, Aboard the USS Belknap
(DLG-26) and USS John F. Kennedy
(CVA-67), 70 Miles East of Sicily, Italy
During night exercises the aircraft carrier USS John F.
Kennedy and the cruiser USS Belknap collided,
lodging the Belknap's superstructure beneath the
Kennedy's overhanging flight deck. The carrier's fuel
lines were ruptured, spreading gasoline over the deck of the
Belknap, which ignited and burned for more than two
hours.
Although this accident is one of the best-known and
well-documented nuclear weapons accidents, the presence of
nuclear weapons onboard the Belknap and the
Kennedy have never been publicly acknowledged by the
Navy or Pentagon. However, documents obtained by Greenpeace show
that minutes after the incident occurred, the commander of
Carrier Striking Forces for the Sixth Fleet sent a secret
nuclear weapons accident message (a "Broken Arrow") to the
Pentagon, warning of the "high probability that nuclear weapons
aboard the Belknap were involved in fire and
explosion." The story has been corroborated by a retired admiral
who was aboard the Belknap at the time of the
accident.
One of the ships that came to the Belknap's aid was
the nuclear-capable frigate USS Bordelon, which
collided with the USS John F. Kennedy a year later 75
miles north of Scotland. That ship's anti-submarine rocket
(ASROC) container, where nuclear weapons would normally be held,
was nearly crushed.
*April 16, 1976, Aboard the Cruiser USS Albany
(CG-10)
The Cruiser USS Albany experienced a nuclear weapons
incident -- known as a "Dull Sword" -- when a TALOS
surface-to-surface missile's nuclear warhead was damaged.
"Selected Accidents Involving Nuclear Weapons -1950-1993,"
Greenpeace, http://www.greenpeace.org./
*November 28, 1977, West Germany
An army CH-47 carrying nuclear warheads on a logistical move
crashed shortly after takeoff when a fire caused the helicopter
to lose power to an engine. The fire was extinguished and the
weapons were safely removed to a storage site.
"Dull Sword" Incident. Teletype dated November 28, 1977, to
Commander, Field Command Defense Atomic Support Agency, Kirtland
AFB, from Commander, Army Armament Materiel Readiness Command
(ARRCOM), Rock Island, Illinois. Cited in Chuck Hansen,
"Appendix 3: Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents: 1950-1980,"
p. 60.
*September 15, 1980, Grand Forks AFB, North
Dakota
A B-52H bomber carrying nuclear-armed AGM-69 short range
attack missiles caught fire while on the ground during an alert
exercise. A strong wind and firefighters managed to keep the
intense flames away from the missiles. The fire was caused by a
fuel leak and burned intensely, fed by fuel from the Number
Three main wing tank. The fire burned for more than three hours
and was extinguished only after the fuel flow had ceased.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Director Roger Batzel
later testified that if "the wind was blowing down the axis of
the airplane, the whole aircraft [including its load of
nuclear-armed missiles] would have been engulfed in
flames."
USAF Mishap Report, Headquarters 15th Air Force, March AFB,
California, September 29, 1980; "North Dakota's Near-Nuclear
Disaster," Peninsula Times Tribune, August 13, 1991,
pp. A-1, A-6; Kidder UCRL-LR-107454, p. E1. Cited in Chuck
Hansen, "Appendix 3: Typical U.S. Nuclear Weapon Accidents:
1950-1980," p. 61.
*April 9,
1981, Aboard the USS George Washington (SSBN-598) in
the South China Sea
The nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine USS
George Washington collided with a Japanese freighter in the
East China Sea, causing slight damage to the submarine's sail
and sinking the freighter. The submarine carried up to 160
nuclear warheads on its 16 Poseidon C-3 sea-launched ballistic
missiles.
*March 12, 1984, Aboard the USS
Kitty Hawk (CV-63)
The aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk collided with a
Victor-class Soviet nuclear-powered attack submarine in the Sea
of Japan. At the time of the collision, the USS Kitty
Hawk was carrying up to several dozen nuclear weapons, and
the Soviet submarine probably carried two nuclear
torpedoes.
"Selected Accidents Involving Nuclear Weapons -1950-1993,"
Greenpeace, http://www.greenpeace.org./
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